Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, October 3, 1913 Page: 8 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hallettsville Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Friench Simpson Memorial Library.
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FEEL1UGHT ALL THE
! MR. BEECHER AT A FUNERAL1 FASHiONS ROSEBUDS OF IRON
Remington
Cabs find tham
t b a closest
shooting black
&owdmr $ halls
TIME.
New Jersey Blacksmith Probably the
Most Skillful Metal Worker In
the World.
Rev. Dr. Twlchell of Hartford Recalls
Famous Man as He Saw Him in
His Last Years.
Spanking will not cure children
of getting the bed, because it is
Louis Van Boeckei, the blacksmith not a habit, but a, dangerous dis-
Rotvan Drug
Chicago, HI..
by have discovered a strictly harm-
He less remedy for this distressing
disease, and to make known its
merits they will .send a 50c pack- r}Ctht all the time—if it some-
age, securely wrapped and pre- times stops working and you be-
paid, absolutely free to any read- comTe bilious and headachy” —
the'New York Sun. *'He first fashions er of the Herald. This remedy don t take calomel but try Dod-
ihe core, and then fprges the smaller also cures frequent desire* to son.9 Liver Tone,
i sat close beside him as petals, hammering the ends out flat. urjnate and inability to control T ou are safe in taking Dod-
Next. he takee a contrivance shaped urine during the night or day in son’s Liver Tone. It’s a harm-
Iike a screw-drtver and opens the out- ol(j or y0ung. The C. H. Rowan less. • pleasant vegetable remedy
er petals first . After hollow- ^ q0 js an reliable house that starts the liver without stir-
Write to them today for the free ring up your whole system as
into the fire, and heats the stems 0f medicine. .Cure the afflicted mem- calomel often does. It is especi
the petals.* He takes it but of the fire, bersjof your family, then tell ally good for children who need
and hammers the stems into a solid your neighbors and friends about a dver tonic once in a while, but
massv • this remedy. y who should not be dosed wfith
“He* forms the larger petals in the*-'’1 (Advertisement.) " Strong drugs.
Don’t Let Periodical Spells
of Lazy Liver Ruin Tour
Temper and Spoil Your
Work.
Though for a period of nearly ?0
years it was my fortune to hear him
now and then, and occasionally to
meet him, the last .time is specially
memorable to me, says a correspon-
: dent of the Congregationalist. It was
about two years bbfore his death, at
the funeral in Ithaca. N. Y., of the
! late Henry M. Sage? who had been an
early parishioner of his in .Brooklyn
and one of his most' intimate friends.
Mr. Beecher was then seventy-twd
years old. 1
he rose to begin the service (it was in
a private house), and marked the
sturdy vigor of his frame. No sign
of any decay or infirmity of *age was
observable. He read, from a small.
I fine print Bible and without ‘glasses, a
portion of the Holy Scripture, with a
veiled but consummate art of elocu-
tion thar delicately carried the impres-
sion that the word3 were not man s
words, but the breathings of, a divine
i Comforter.
In the address that followed’ his
voice, soft, rich, melodious, seemed
without the least effort on his-part to
1 float out on the air more like per turn
than a voice, yet with a pow^r thar
i made every sellable he uttered clear-
1 ly audible to the hundreds of people
! that filled the house and the wide ver-
! andas outside. There were tears in it
i first and broken tones of sorrow-, .bur
presently he mounted up,-as on w ings,
as a lark rises skyward, into the re-
gions of Christian victory -and' hope,
taking us all with him; and sang—1
can liken it to nothing else—a; song
v£ the resurrection, sweet, triumphant^
(apluting, beyond description; thence
passing into prayer, In which the
strain ascended to a still further
height, hoveriirg, as it were, about
the gates of the celestial city, com-
muning there with the angels.gof eter-
1 nal peace, till the listener forgot, for
the time, the burden and grief of life
and felt that Christ and the Father’s Foreigners GotMuch Amusement Out
j house alono were real. of Doings of the Very Serious
It was simply wonderful; and since Native Soldiers.
j [ was not to see Mr Beecher again on __--y
earth I am glad that it is my last Humor, of a grim sort, of course,
recollection of him. abounded in the revolution which es-
As for himself, he, n the i»ear ap- tabtished a republic in China. Fred-
proach of death, said to Professor erick McCormick,, in "The Flowery
Stowe, who', told it to me, that fli^ Republic," 'ells of the formation of a
thought of getting through with this corps, in the north.who gioried-in the
world was oftentimes to him like .the title, "Dare to .Die."-. The rebels in
waft ‘upon his- brow of a cool breeze Canton were hot satisfied to adopt
i on a sultry summer day—so blessed this term from their brothers, and
1 and cheering was his anticipation of delighting in the superlative and ex-
the life beyond. ' - ' ; treme, called themselves the "Deter-
-— mined to Die." Thg first were merely
Girls and Convention. willing martyrs, but th<* Cantonese
Th*» truth is that the free mind has w©re desperate for death. A foreign
of a small Belgiari hamlet, has won ease
more than'local fame by his skill in C().,
from
fashioning
means o'i the tools of his trade,
has an American rival, however, in the
person of Jamee Cran, a blacksmith
whose smithy is in Plainfield. N. J.
“It is interesting to watch this
smith make a rose,” says a writer in
HELLS
Wf “The Shell With a Nickname”
gn T Y/L’RL proud of the fact that gunners have
■■I YV nick-named our black p owder loads. To go
jjjflH around the country and hear th&rn talk about
**The Old Reliable Yellow Shells’’ feebas good as a
cheery greeting and a slap dr the back.
gPL New Club Shells are really the premier black powder
tel shells of this country —Standard'for over 50 years.
The No. 2 Primer grives a anippy ignition —surer and
quicker than you usually find in hla :k powder shells.
For result* in your shooting, rifle or shotgun—ge* Remington-
UMC. ammunition—with the Red Ball Mark on every .do*.
A*i the lives! dealer in thi* community. He conies them.
Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co.
299 Broadway B . , New York
Bishop.—The poultry enthusi-
asts of this section will give
poultry show here this fall. Sev-
eral owners of fine fowls have
signified their willingness to ex-
hibit their prize birds at this
Succeed when everything fain.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousands have iesimei
FOR KIDNEY,LIVER
SYOMACH 7RGUEL2
it- is the best medicine sv-r sold
over a drugyist'C ‘‘ountrr.
prize
I ■ show, and much interest is being
i manifested in the event.
HUMORS OF THE CHINESE WAR
A. F. Kotzebue. Druggist at
Moulton, reports that A SINGLE
DOSE of simple buckthorn bark,
Over $2,000 glycerine, etc., as compounded
iPflph^%old in Adler-i-ka, the German appen-
, . ■ dicitis remedy.' stops constipation
fd this sum- or ^as on stomach IN-
a farmer STANTLY. Many Moulton peo-
Mr. Greer pie are-being helped. 6
i,i= tr-nit ;= (Advertisement)
When constipated, headachy
. bilious, stomach sour,
breath bad.
says Mr. McCormick, “’was a company -They Make You Feel Good-
of bomb: thrdwers called the Bomb The peasant purgative effect
Pioneers. Their uniform was a hgh< , j u ,
blue foreign kniued underwear that produced by Chamberlain s Tab-
fitted them as their own skins. They lots and trie health J, condition Gw
wore brown knitted socks supported body and mind which, thev create
by American garters. Over the un- make? one feel- joyful. For Sale
derwear they wore shoulder braces by all dealers,
from which were stretched across the (Advertise .)
For Weakness and Loss of Appetite
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic,
GROVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out
Malaria and builds up th- system A true tonic
and sure Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c.
(Advertisement.)
To Prevent Blood Poisoning
apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR.
PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL. a sur
gtcal dressing that relieves pam and heals at
the same time. Not a liniment. 50c. Jl.OCl
(Advertisement.)
Orange. —The first two silos to
be erected in Orange county have
just been completed by farmers
near this city. The silos will be
used as an experiment.
BRAND
DIAMOND
•; Ggproe. — The $100,000 in good
roa'ds bonds, recently issued in
* • . »
road-district No. 1. were sold last
tf£ek, and it is expected that
work- will begin soon on the roads
in that district*.
Since Lydia E. Pinkham’s
, a , .* •" :
Vegetable Compouiid Re-
stored Her Health. -
THE JOY OF
HOME
T.v* »•!,* ir» r. \ t-j
ir.iiii' l tin* Teii'ph.'in*
burs. fru'ibK in <rk,'l ' >r
niil sf• »r»* o.m be ri'.u.be.! ir in
Hist inf by (lie linen* lijvieg
1 Vlepiioru* service
Farmer Needs Ideals.
The r.fiMls of ideals on the farm is
urged by H E Rswine of the Ohio
College of Agriculture.
Failures in farming are often "race-
able td a lack of ideals," Mr Eswine
says ‘The people who have made a
pronounced success have been the peo-
ple who have a clear and definite no-
tion of the things they are trying to
at*ain Every man ought to try to
make his home an ideal home because
of Ins trying to make it measure up to
some definite s’andard Next, try to
make your farm the bes" possible for
its size and kind. To attain his ideal
he must make a careful study of all
his problems Average amounts to
the acre ought not to satisfy Excep-
tional quality and quantity should bo
the mark set."
THE RURAL TELEPHONE
ProvidcsTbi> home n<*> os<ity
and I 'ojseri’ at very ! w cost
to people who live in (lie
country
naiias i< r tne past year. He
has had v. ide experience in run-
ning dowa criminals and will be
a valuable acquisition to the local
department. —Houston Chronicle.
Apply'to our nfsrt il Mao
• ggr or writ*cto
T it E
Southwestern #
Telegraph and A
Telephone Co.
DALLAS. - TEXAS
Notice.
We are in the market for
pecans, \vill pay top prices,
us before selling.
Nolen Prdui <;e <
r e v.
See
MltSi
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Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, October 3, 1913, newspaper, October 3, 1913; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008723/m1/8/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.